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Vlogging Pod

Vlogging Pod

376 episodes — Page 1 of 8

From Gas Pumps to Grocery Aisles

May 12, 20267 min

The Playbook We've Seen Once Before

May 11, 202610 min

NDA With Big Tech, Did Ohio Communities Secretly Approve AI Infrastructure?

May 10, 20266 min

You Never Chose AI… The Expansion Already Around You, and Inside Your 401(k)

May 9, 202610 min

Howard Lutnick and the Transcript the Public Still Can’t Read

May 8, 20268 min

Where Your Property Taxes Go… Breaking Down School Funding and State Aid

May 7, 202613 min

Ohio’s Hidden Safety Nets, 10 Laws And Programs That Could Reduce Financial Pressure

May 6, 202610 min

Where Did Congress Go? The Lawmakers Who Vanished From View

May 6, 20266 min

Borrow, Buy, Die

May 5, 20266 min

When Representation Stopped Rotating, Citizens to Career Politicians

May 4, 20267 min

Billions Abroad, Cuts at Home

May 3, 20268 min

The day the voting map changed again, Supreme Court's decision April 29th 2026

May 2, 20266 min

When Voting Rules Change

May 1, 20264 min

Protocol Versus Reality

Apr 30, 20266 min

The Missing General… And the Questions That Followed

Apr 20, 20263 min

A Story 20 Years in the Making, Sarah Marshall

Apr 17, 202630 min

The Global Puzzle No One Is Explaining

Apr 11, 20265 min

Genocide? Nuking Iran? And the Fallout That Reaches Us

Apr 7, 20266 min

A Warning Without Shouting, War in the Middle East

Apr 5, 20266 min

Ep 374What Do Iran, Microchips, and Balloons Have in Common?

Exploring how global conflict tied to Iran is impacting more than just oil and gas, uncovering a lesser-known resource quietly connected to supply chains, technology, and everyday life in ways most people never think about. #EnergySupply #GlobalEconomy #SupplyChain #Microchips #Helium #Geopolitics #ResourceAwareness #DidYouKnow #EconomicImpact #EverydayEconomics

Mar 28, 20263 min

Ep 373Spring Might Be Here… But Next Winter’s Energy Costs Are Already Starting

A quiet shift in the global energy system is already underway, and most people won’t notice it until the bills arrive. What’s happening behind the scenes with LNG, global demand, and supply limits could shape what you pay to heat your home next winter. #EnergyCosts #HeatingBills #NaturalGas #LNG #EnergyMarket #CostOfLiving #ElectricityPrices #GlobalEnergy #WinterPrep #EnergyCrisis

Mar 23, 20265 min

Ep 372The Truth Behind Gas Prices in America

Exploring why gas prices continue to rise even when the United States produces much of its own oil, breaking down the global system that quietly determines what Americans pay at the pump and uncovering the disconnect between expectation and reality. #GasPrices #OilIndustry #EnergyPolicy #GlobalEconomy #FuelCosts #EnergyIndependence #EconomicsExplained #CurrentEvents

Mar 22, 20265 min

Ep 371Oil, Power, & Profit While Families Turn To GoFundMe: Hidden Stakes Behind This War

Exploring how a series of global headlines connect a widening regional conflict, rising oil tensions around the Strait of Hormuz, hesitation from international allies, economic pressures building at home, and difficult questions about who bears the human cost when war expands. #MiddleEast #IranConflict #GlobalOil #StraitOfHormuz #EnergyMarkets #WarEconomics #Geopolitics #CostOfWar #GlobalTensions #EconomicImpact

Mar 16, 20267 min

Ep 370No Insurance for Americans while Pentagon Spends on Lobster and King Crab

Exploring a growing contrast in Washington as millions of Americans face rising insurance costs and possible coverage losses while new reports reveal controversial Pentagon spending at the end of the fiscal year. Looking at what the numbers actually show and what it could mean for healthcare and federal budget priorities moving forward. #HealthcareCosts #AffordableCareAct #HealthInsurance #ACA #RisingPremiums #FederalSpending #BudgetPriorities #PentagonSpending #HealthcareAccess #PolicyAndPolitics

Mar 11, 20267 min

Ep 369Coaching Beyond Limits: Coach Scott Martin’s Comeback Story

A warm and engaging conversation with Coach Scott Martin about resilience, perspective, and finding purpose again after life takes an unexpected turn. In this thoughtful yet lighthearted chat, Martin reflects on surviving a rare infection that changed his life, the long road of recovery, and how he rediscovered his passion through coaching. Filled with humor, honesty, and heart, the discussion highlights how perseverance and belief in others can transform even the most difficult setbacks into something meaningful. #Resilience #OvercomingAdversity #CoachingBeyondLimits #ScottMartin #PlayFromYourHeart #SportsLeadership #YouthCoaching #Inspiration #HumanSpirit #NeverGiveUp

Mar 6, 202653 min

Ep 368Immunity, Influence, and the Epstein Files

Exploring the documented history of Jeffrey Epstein’s rise, the unusual legal protections that shaped his early plea deal, and the ongoing battle over sealed and unsealed records. Examining how power, surveillance allegations, and elite access created a structure that continues to raise questions about leverage, accountability, and institutional failure — without speculation, and grounded in what the public record actually shows. #EpsteinFiles #InstitutionalAccountability #PowerAndInfluence #LegalTransparency #InvestigativeJournalism #CourtRecords #PublicAccountability #JusticeSystem

Mar 3, 20268 min

Ep 367Women, Voter Access & Iran: Connecting the Dots

Exploring how International Women’s Day frames today’s debate over voter access, the SAVE Act, expanded federal oversight, and escalating tensions with Iran, tracing how policy decisions, election narratives, and global conflict messaging can intersect ahead of the midterms. #InternationalWomensDay #SAVEAct #VoterAccess #ElectionPolicy #FederalOversight #ElectionIntegrity #Midterms2026 #IranConflict

Mar 1, 20268 min

Ep 366Power, Policy, and Public Opinion Today’s Newspull

A fast-moving rundown of the headlines shaping the national conversation right now, highlighting the legal decisions, political tensions, and public reactions making waves across the country. #PublicOpinion #ImmigrationPolicy #SupremeCourt #GovernmentAccountability #WildfireSettlement #ElectionMaps #DOJ #Infrastructure #PoliticalNews

Feb 21, 20264 min

Ep 365Equal Time or Equal Silence

Exploring the controversy surrounding Texas State Representative and U.S. Senate candidate James Talarico after a nationally televised interview was pulled over concerns about the FCC’s equal time rule. Examining how the rule is intended to function, the historical exemptions for news and interview programming, and the broader question of whether regulatory caution is protecting fairness or limiting voter access during an election cycle. #EqualTime #FCC #JamesTalarico #FreeSpeech #BroadcastRegulation #Election2026 #PoliticalMedia #PublicAirwaves

Feb 17, 20263 min

Ep 364Rebuilding Humanity Through Fiction, A.M. Geever

We spoke with Annie Geever today about her path into post-apocalyptic fiction and how writing gradually shifted from a personal outlet into a serious creative pursuit. We talked with her about her fascination with exploring what happens after catastrophes rather than focusing on the disaster itself, and how those aftermath settings allow her to dig into human behavior under pressure. Our conversation centered on character-driven storytelling, moral complexity, and the idea that power dynamics are often rooted in some form of love, whether for a person, an idea, or survival itself. We also talked about independent publishing and what it takes to keep creating a lasting label. Overall, it was a thoughtful discussion about resilience, motivation, and the emotional layers that shape compelling fiction. #PostApocalypticFiction #IndieAuthorLife #CharacterDrivenStories #StorytellingCraft #MoralComplexity #WritersJourney #HighStakesFiction #CreativeProcess #IndependentPublishing #DystopianThemes

Feb 13, 202625 min

Ep 363The Epstein Ripple Effect

Exploring how the Epstein case continues to reverberate across culture, legislation, and politics, as a prominent artist distances herself from an agency tied to newly surfaced emails, lawmakers introduce Virginia’s Law alongside survivors to address longstanding legal barriers, and a U.S. senator questions a cabinet official’s past associations. Tracing how accountability now unfolds not only in courtrooms but through reputational shifts, policy reform efforts, and political scrutiny. #EpsteinFiles #Accountability #VirginiaGiuffre #InstitutionalReform #PoliticalScrutiny #SurvivorJustice #PowerAndInfluence

Feb 11, 20263 min

Ep 362Atrocity by Design: Epstein, Power, and a Government That Looks Away

Examining how policy decisions translate into human harm while institutional silence shields those with power. Tracing a pattern from immigrants and protesters being unalived, to future losses driven by housing, healthcare, and insurance rollbacks, and connecting that harm to the continued containment of the Epstein case. Exploring how delayed disclosures, legal silence, uninvestigated sites, and fragmented media coverage reflect a governing instinct to manage corruption rather than confront it, even as the human cost continues to rise. #EpsteinFiles #GovernmentAccountability #HumanCost #InstitutionalFailure #PolicyConsequences #Corruption #CivilRights #ICE #Transparency #Justice

Feb 9, 20265 min

Ep 361When Power Feels Threatened: Voting Taken Away From the States?

Exploring how recent statements from the head of this administration about federalizing elections intersect with fears of losing congressional control, potential impeachment, and stalled policy agendas. The discussion places those remarks in their political context and examines what Article I, Section 4 of the Constitution actually says about who controls federal elections, why that balance was deliberately written into the Constitution, and why debates over election authority tend to surface most aggressively when political power feels at risk. #ArticleOne #ElectionsClause #VotingRights #Constitution #MidtermElections #ElectionLaw #Democracy #CongressAndTheStates #Accountability

Feb 5, 20264 min

Ep 360“The System Sucks, This Job Sucks”: A DOJ Lawyer Speaks Out

Exploring the moment a Department of Justice lawyer openly acknowledged systemic failure during a federal immigration court hearing, revealing how overwhelming caseloads, ignored court orders, and institutional strain are colliding inside the justice system and exposing deeper cracks in the rule of law. #DOJ #RuleOfLaw #ImmigrationCourts #FederalCourts #Accountability #JusticeSystem #GovernmentOversight

Feb 4, 20263 min

Ep 359Hidden in Plain Sight: Epstein Files, Power Networks, and Election Oversight

Exploring how newly released Epstein documents, court-unsealed records, and recent federal filings reveal recurring patterns of access, influence, and delayed accountability. Examining what the files actually show, where speculation ends and documentation begins, and why questions around elections, government data, and oversight continue to resurface long after initial denials. #EpsteinFiles #Accountability #GovernmentOversight #ElectionIntegrity #PowerAndInfluence #Transparency #InvestigativePodcast

Feb 2, 20266 min

Ep 358When Women Talk: Power, Climate, and Truth Colliding with Diana Colleen

Exploring how women navigate global warming, concentrated wealth, and storytelling as tools for accountability while reflecting on shared life stages, personal resilience, and the ways lived experience shapes both fiction and truth telling. #WomenInConversation #ClimateReality #PowerAndAccountability #WomenWriters #StorytellingAsResistance #SurvivorVoices #TruthAndImpact

Jan 30, 202641 min

Ep 357Minnesota Isn’t the Border

Examining how Minnesota became a flashpoint for federal immigration enforcement, including the use of force, the detention of children, pressure for voter data, and growing questions about when constitutional protections apply. Connecting these events to broader concerns about power, accountability, and whether rights are being treated as conditional rather than guaranteed. #MinnesotaIsntTheBorder #ConstitutionalRights #ImmigrationPolicy #CivilLiberties #GovernmentAccountability #RuleOfLaw

Jan 27, 20268 min

Ep 356Aging With Compassion and Clarity, Kathi Miracle

Kathi Miracle is a longtime dementia educator, professional speaker, and caregiving advocate with more than thirty years of hands-on experience in senior living and cognitive health. During our conversation, she shared deeply practical insight drawn from real families, real diagnoses, and real outcomes, including how cognitive decline can be slowed and sometimes prevented when the right tools are used early. The discussion explored aging, dementia care, and caregiving through a compassionate, realistic lens, making it both highly informational and genuinely resourceful for anyone navigating cognitive health concerns or supporting a loved one through the aging process. #AgingWithCompassion #DementiaCare #CognitiveHealth #CaregiverSupport #HealthyAging

Jan 23, 202651 min

Ep 355When the 25th Amendment Isn’t Enough: Article II, Section 4 and Accountability

Exploring the critical difference between the Twenty-Fifth Amendment and Article II, Section 4 of the United States Constitution by breaking down incapacity versus misconduct, explaining why the 25th Amendment only addresses a president’s ability to serve, and examining how impeachment exists as a constitutional safeguard against corruption, abuse of power, and violations of public trust across an entire administration, not just one individual at the top. #Constitution #Impeachment #ArticleIISection4 #25thAmendment #GovernmentAccountability #RuleOfLaw #ChecksAndBalances #CivicEducation

Jan 20, 20264 min

Ep 354The Exhaustive Phase of Power

Exploring what happens when an administration stops governing through consent and instead relies on pressure, intimidation, and institutional friction to maintain control. Examining why U.S. elections are harder to fully dismantle than they appear, how immunity is often misunderstood, and why overt cruelty and normalized harm create deep psychological strain. Tracing how power tends to erode gradually through resistance, legal challenges, and loss of legitimacy rather than through a single dramatic collapse, and why the most dangerous moments often occur when authority begins to slip. #PowerAndPolitics #DemocracyUnderStrain #InstitutionalResilience #ElectionIntegrity #AccountabilityMatters #PoliticalPsychology #CivicAwareness #GovernanceAndPower

Jan 17, 20266 min

Ep 35350 and FⓐCKABLE with Tina Coleman

A fabulous, honest conversation between two 50-year-old women who are done shrinking themselves. This interview dives into life, sexuality after 50, confidence, and the freedom that comes from moving forward without restraints or expectations imposed by others. It’s about owning who you are, embracing desire, and living unapologetically on your own terms. #WomenOver50 #MidlifeConfidence #SexualityAfter50 #AgingOutLoud #UnapologeticWomen #MidlifeFreedom #RealConversations #WomenSupportingWomen

Jan 16, 202629 min

Ep 352Territories Without a Voice: When American Belonging Comes With an Asterisk

A look back at how U.S. territories were once viewed as a temporary step toward statehood and how that expectation quietly changed in the early 1900s. The discussion traces how court rulings known as the Insular Cases created a system where the Constitution applies only partially in U.S. territories, shaping the modern status of places like Puerto Rico, Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa. It then turns to a recent Alaska voter fraud appeal involving an American Samoan woman to show how these century-old legal distinctions continue to affect voting rights, citizenship status, and representation today, raising broader questions about who is considered fully American and why taxation without representation still exists in practice. #USTerritories #VotingRights #AmericanSamoa #NoTaxationWithoutRepresentation #Constitution #CivilRights #Democracy #Representation

Jan 15, 20264 min

Ep 351Are Mail-In Ballots Being Pushed Aside Ahead of the 2026 Midterms?

Recent court rulings, state-level voting law changes, and postal service clarifications are intersecting in ways that make mail-in voting harder to rely on. The focus is on how challenges to ballot deadlines, the elimination of grace periods, and unavoidable mail processing delays shift the risk of disqualification onto voters, and how these combined changes could shape participation in the 2026 midterm elections. #MailInVoting, #VotingRights, #2026Midterms, #ElectionAccess, #BallotDeadlines, #Democracy

Jan 14, 20262 min

Ep 350The Afterwork with Don Akchin

A reflective conversation about life after retirement and what comes next when the routine of work ends. The discussion touches on identity, purpose, mental adjustment, financial realities, and the emotional shift that comes with leaving a long career behind. It explores how people redefine productivity, meaning, and daily structure once the workday no longer defines their time. #RetirementLife #LifeAfterWork #NextChapter #PostCareer #AgingAndPurpose #LifeTransitions #PersonalReflection #AfterRetirement

Jan 9, 202629 min

Ep 349When ICE Goes Too Far: Will Lawmakers Do More Than Talk?

Lawmakers across the country are responding after an ICE agent fatally shot a woman during an encounter in Minneapolis, with video raising serious questions about whether force was justified and whether the vehicle was actually turning away. Reports also suggest the situation escalated after she was told to move and then attempted to do so, and there are conflicting accounts about access to medical care afterward. Minnesota leaders, members of Congress, and national political figures have spoken out, but their reactions are sharply divided along political lines. This episode looks at what they said, how they framed the incident, and whether strong public statements will lead to any real accountability or change going forward. #ICEOverreach #MinneapolisShooting #LawmakersRespond #AccountabilityMatters #UseOfForce #ImmigrationEnforcement #PublicTrust #CivilRights #GovernmentPower

Jan 8, 20263 min

Ep 348When Trust Erodes: The Speech That Said Too Much

The focus is on the head of this administration’s recent speech to Republican lawmakers, where he openly admitted losing support from the American people while insisting that his leadership is being misunderstood. From there the discussion widens to how confidence continues to weaken, including stalled transparency over the Epstein files, renewed rhetoric about acquiring Greenland, and U.S. actions tied to Venezuela. Add to that the vetoing of bipartisan legislation now facing override efforts in Congress, and a picture forms of leadership pushing outward while trust at home slips further away. The conversation centers on how accountability, transparency, and governance choices shape whether the public still believes those in power are acting in their best interest. #PoliticalAccountability #PublicTrust #USPolitics #LeadershipMatters #GovernmentTransparency #EpsteinFiles #GreenlandDebate #Venezuela #Bipartisan #DemocracyInFocus

Jan 7, 20264 min

Ep 347A Shorter Clock: Ohio Removes Mail-In Ballot Grace Period

Ohio Governor Mike DeWine has signed Senate Bill 293 into law, eliminating the state’s four-day mail ballot grace period with only a narrow exception for uniformed and overseas voters. Although the governor said he signed the bill reluctantly and would have preferred a veto, the change immediately alters how mail-in voting works across Ohio. Election officials estimate thousands of ballots could be excluded under the new rules, while advocates warn the shorter timeline will disproportionately affect seniors, people with disabilities, rural voters, and students. The episode also places Ohio’s move within a broader national push to end post-Election Day grace periods, as legal challenges backed by Republican leadership continue to work their way toward the U.S. Supreme Court. #OhioPolitics #VotingRights #MailInVoting #ElectionLaw #SB293 #VoterAccess #ElectionIntegrity #CivicEngagement

Dec 24, 20252 min

Ep 346Supreme Court Draws the Line: National Guard Deployment Blocked in Chicago

The U.S. Supreme Court declined to grant the administration’s emergency request to deploy National Guard troops in Chicago, allowing federalization in theory but blocking their use on the ground. Illinois and Chicago argued the move violated the 10th Amendment and lacked any credible evidence of rebellion, a finding upheld by a federal district judge and largely affirmed by the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals. While the ruling is preliminary, it represents a significant judicial check on executive power and is likely to strengthen similar legal challenges underway in Los Angeles, Portland, and Washington, D.C., as broader questions over the use of regular armed forces continue through the courts. #SupremeCourt #NationalGuard #Chicago #FederalPower #StatesRights #TenthAmendment #ImmigrationPolicy #JudicialCheck #ConstitutionalLaw #CivilLiberties

Dec 23, 20251 min

Ep 345Pulled in the U.S.: The 60 Minutes CECOT Report

The 60 Minutes report that did not air in the United States but was broadcast in Canada examines conditions inside El Salvador’s CECOT prison, where men deported from the U.S. were detained earlier this year. The segment links what is shown on camera to a 2023 U.S. government human-rights report that warned of abuse, torture, overcrowding, and denial of due process in El Salvador’s prison system. Footage shows detainees being stripped, shaved, and processed under armed guard, while testimony describes beatings, confinement in small enclosed spaces, and severe water deprivation. The report also states that the U.S. paid El Salvador about six million dollars to take in detainees. While CECOT remains operational, there is currently no confirmed program sending new people from the U.S. there, and most of the Venezuelan detainees sent earlier this year have since been released and returned to Venezuela. The segment raises serious questions about human rights, accountability, and why a completed investigation was pulled from U.S. airwaves. #60Minutes #CECOT #HumanRights #PressFreedom #DueProcess #Deportation #Detention #InvestigativeJournalism #GlobalNews

Dec 23, 20253 min

Ep 344The Epstein Files Reappear: What the DOJ Took Down and Put Back

A Justice Department decision to remove and then restore an image from the Epstein case files has reignited concerns about transparency, selective redactions, and public trust. The brief disappearance of the image prompted backlash from journalists and lawmakers, raising new questions about how Epstein-related records are being handled, what remains unseen, and whether political pressure is influencing what the public is allowed to access. #EpsteinFiles #Transparency #Accountability #DepartmentOfJustice #PublicRecords #GovernmentOversight #NewsAnalysis #MediaWatch

Dec 22, 20252 min